Protesters opposing Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood run from tear gas during clashes with police in front of the Presidential Palace, as some protesters tried to break through one of the gates of the palace, in Cairo, February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)

Egyptian police had to use water cannons and tear gas to disperse stone-throwing protesters gathered outside the presidential palace in Cairo.

The clashes broke out after several hundred demonstrators marched to the palace on a day of marches against Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi. Other protesters marched to Tahrir Square chanting,"Down with Brotherhood rule," Naharnet reported. Thousands of other protesters took part in separate demonstrations across the country.

The Presidential Guard began spraying protesters with water hoses after they attempted to remove barbed wire surrounding the palace, Al-Ahram reported.

"We may be few in numbers but we will not back down from fighting criminals dressed up in police uniform," protester Ahmed Farghaly told Reuters.

Protesters are demanding that Morsi fulfill the goals of the revolution which brought him and his Muslim Brotherhood party to power. Those demands include a new unity government, amendments to an Islamist-drafted constitution, and the sacking of Egypt's prosecutor general.

The demonstrators are also angry that no one has been held accountable for the deaths of dozens of protesters in clashes with police during recent months.

“People don’t really need any opposition calls for protest because the whole country is in a standstill. There’s nothing moving forward because there’s no real administration addressing the people’s needs and demands and anger in the streets,” Opposition spokesman Ahmed Hawary told RT.

Earlier Monday, a central Cairo subway station was blocked by several masked men, who fought passengers trying to stop them. At the same time, the doors of the main administrative building for state services, which is outside the station at Tahrir Square, were locked by protesters. They also blocked traffic at a main bridge near the presidential palace.

The protesters were marking the second anniversary of the ousting of former President Hosni Mubarak with angry protests directed at his successor.

Demonstrators have been protesting against President Mohamed Morsi at Tahrir Square since mid-November.­

Protesters, who oppose Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood try to break through one of the gates of the Presidential Palace in Cairo February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)

­Author and journalist Ramzy Baroud told RT that the opposition groups’ actions were triggered by the instability of Egypt's fractured civil society.

“For the last two years, Egypt hasn’t been allowed to have a strong central government that is capable of pushing the political process forward, and thus the economy of the country, the social cohesion, and everything else,” Baroud said. “As a result, you have this huge vacuum and this polarization. And that allows the Egyptian society to be open for exploitation.”

Baroud singled out the Black Bloc, a group of masked youths who present themselves as the defenders of anti-Morsi protesters.

“I’m not necessarily saying that the Black Bloc in particular is a sort of foreign conspiracy, but there is a possibility that they are in fact outsiders who are trying to add fuel to the fire that is taking over Egypt’s urban centers,” he said. “It’s a phenomenon that I think resulted from the frustration, disenfranchisement, and the general feeling of betrayal that the youth of Egypt are feeling right now. The issue is why the Black Bloc would appeal to the youth of Egypt in the first place, unless there was that vacuum and that need that was created by the lack of centrality, lack of confidence.”

Protesters opposing Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood sit in a line facing police vehicles after police fired tear gas at protesters near the Presidential Palace in Cairo February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)

Protesters opposing Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood sit in a line facing police vehicles after police fired tear gas at protesters near the Presidential Palace in Cairo February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)

Protesters opposing Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi and the Muslim Brotherhood sit in a line facing police vehicles after police fired tear gas at protesters near the Presidential Palace in Cairo February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Asmaa Waguih)

A protester, who opposes Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, plays drums during clashes with riot police in front of the presidential palace in Cairo February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

A protester, who opposes Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi, throws a tear gas canister, which was thrown earlier by the riot police, during clashes in front of the presidential palace in Cairo February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

Protesters take part in a march during the second anniversary of the resignation of veteran President Hosni Mubarak, at Tahrir Square in Cairo, February 11, 2013. (Reuters / Amr Dalsh)

The placard reads, "Members of Black Block are heroes not terrorists, Brotherhood's traders of religion". Protesters take part in a march during the second anniversary of the resignation of veteran President Hosni Mubarak, February 11, 2013.(Reuters / Amr Dalsh)